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THE ECONOMICS OF MONEY,BANKING, AND FINANCIAL MARKETS 572

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540 PA R T V I International Finance and Monetary Policy such increases put a strain on the international financial system and may stimulate world inflation, the Fed worries about U.S balance-of-payments and current account deficits To help shrink these deficits, the Fed might pursue a more contractionary monetary policy Exchange Rate Unlike balance-of-payments considerations, which have become less important Considerations under the current managed float system, exchange rate considerations now play a greater role in the conduct of monetary policy If a central bank does not want to see its currency fall in value, it may pursue a more contractionary monetary policy of reducing the money supply to raise the domestic interest rate, thereby strengthening its currency Similarly, if a country experiences an appreciation in its currency, domestic industry may suffer from increased foreign competition and may pressure the central bank to pursue a higher rate of money growth in order to lower the exchange rate TO PE G O R NOT TO P EG : E XCHA NG E -RAT E TARGE T IN G AS AN ALTE RN ATI VE M O NE TARY P O LI CY STRAT EG Y In Chapter 18, we discussed several monetary policy strategies that could be followed to promote price stability, including monetary targeting and inflation targeting One other strategy also uses a strong nominal anchor to promote price stability: exchange-rate targeting (sometimes referred to as an exchange-rate peg) Targeting the exchange rate is a monetary policy strategy with a long history It can take the form of fixing the value of the domestic currency to a commodity such as gold, the key feature of the gold standard described earlier in the chapter More recently, fixed exchange-rate regimes have involved fixing the value of the domestic currency to that of a large, low-inflation country like the United States or Germany (the anchor country) Another alternative is to adopt a crawling target or peg, in which a currency is allowed to depreciate at a steady rate so that the inflation rate in the pegging country can be higher than that of the anchor country Advantages of Exchange-Rate Targeting Exchange-rate targeting has several advantages First, the nominal anchor of an exchange-rate target directly contributes to keeping inflation under control by tying the inflation rate for internationally traded goods to that found in the anchor country It does this because the foreign price of internationally traded goods is set by the world market, while the domestic price of these goods is fixed by the exchange-rate target For example, until 2002 in Argentina the exchange rate for the Argentine peso was exactly one to the U.S dollar, so that a bushel of wheat traded internationally at five U.S dollars had its price set at five pesos If the exchange-rate target is credible (i.e., expected to be adhered to), the exchangerate target has the added benefit of anchoring inflation expectations to the inflation rate in the anchor country Second, an exchange-rate target provides an automatic rule for the conduct of monetary policy that helps mitigate the time-inconsistency problem described in the Web Appendix to Chapter 15 As we saw earlier, an exchangerate target forces a tightening of monetary policy when there is a tendency for the domestic currency to depreciate or a loosening of policy when there is a tendency for the domestic currency to appreciate, so that discretionary monetary policy is less of an option The central bank will therefore be constrained from falling into the time-inconsistency trap of trying to expand output and employment in the short run by pursuing overly expansionary monetary policy

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